John Rubinstein
Biography
John Rubinstein received his PhD from Cambridge University where he worked in Medical Research Council laboratories under the supervision of Sir John E. Walker (Nobel Prize for Chemistry, 1997) and Dr. Richard Henderson (Nobel Prize for Chemistry, 2017). Dr. Rubinstein was a post-doctoral research associate at the MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology before returning to Canada for a National Cancer Institute of Canada (NCIC) post-doctoral fellowship at the Banting and Best Department of Medical Research. He joined the Research Institute of The Hospital for Sick Children in 2006.
Research
The Rubinstein laboratory uses and develops tools, especially the method of electron cryomicroscopy (cryo-EM), to study the structure and function of biological molecules. These tools allow us to understand the molecular machines involved in the flow of biological energy in cells. We are investigating how mycobacteria, the pathogens that cause tuberculosis (TB) and other infections, extract energy from their environment, and working with partners to find new drugs to treat TB and other nontuberculosis mycobacterial (NTM) infections. We are also studying how neurons use energy to communicate with each other, a process that can go wrong in epilepsy and other neurological conditions.
Education and experience
- 2003–2005: Postdoctoral Fellow, Banting and Best Department of Medical Research, University of Toronto, Canada
- 2002–2003: Postdoctoral Fellow, MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Cambridge, U.K.
- 1998–2001: PhD, Medical Research Council (LMB and DHNU), University of Cambridge, U.K.
- 1994–1998: B.Sc., College of Physical and Engineering Science, University of Guelph, Canada
Achievements
- 2024: Elected Fellow, Royal Sosciety of Canada (FRSC)
- 2021–2028: Canada Research Chair (Tier 1) in Electron Cryomicroscopy
- 2020: Doctorate of Philosophy honoris causa -Stockholm University
- 2020: National Lecturer - Biophysical Society of Canada
- 2014–2021: Canada Research Chair (Tier 1) in Electron cryomicroscopy
- 2014: GE Healthcare New Investigator Award – Canadian Society for Molecular Biosciences
- 2013: Burton Medal - Microscopy Society of America
- 2007–2012: New Investigator Award - Canadian Institutes of Health Research